GingerAle
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February 26, 2016, 07:44:32 PM |
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"commit to disk" he means never save the seed in a text file, for example.
there are also ways to only save files in ram in linux, so they get erased upon shutdown.
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dEBRUYNE
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February 26, 2016, 07:54:38 PM |
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"commit to disk" he means never save the seed in a text file, for example.
there are also ways to only save files in ram in linux, so they get erased upon shutdown.
I think you could improve safety here by booting from a Linux (Ubuntu) USB stick with the generator on it. @phishead, I could walk you through it if you want on IRC.
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wpalczynski
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Activity: 1456
Merit: 1000
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February 26, 2016, 08:14:26 PM |
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"commit to disk" he means never save the seed in a text file, for example.
there are also ways to only save files in ram in linux, so they get erased upon shutdown.
I think you could improve safety here by booting from a Linux (Ubuntu) USB stick with the generator on it. @phishead, I could walk you through it if you want on IRC. Maybe post is here afterwards? I'm sure others would benefit greatly from such a tutorial if it does not exist!
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dEBRUYNE
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February 26, 2016, 08:48:03 PM |
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"commit to disk" he means never save the seed in a text file, for example.
there are also ways to only save files in ram in linux, so they get erased upon shutdown.
I think you could improve safety here by booting from a Linux (Ubuntu) USB stick with the generator on it. @phishead, I could walk you through it if you want on IRC. Maybe post is here afterwards? I'm sure others would benefit greatly from such a tutorial if it does not exist! Yeah I'll try to make a guide for it, it's long overdue as well.
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wpalczynski
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February 26, 2016, 09:01:15 PM |
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"commit to disk" he means never save the seed in a text file, for example.
there are also ways to only save files in ram in linux, so they get erased upon shutdown.
I think you could improve safety here by booting from a Linux (Ubuntu) USB stick with the generator on it. @phishead, I could walk you through it if you want on IRC. Maybe post is here afterwards? I'm sure others would benefit greatly from such a tutorial if it does not exist! Yeah I'll try to make a guide for it, it's long overdue as well. Thanks
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GingerAle
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Activity: 1260
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February 27, 2016, 04:05:06 AM |
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"commit to disk" he means never save the seed in a text file, for example.
there are also ways to only save files in ram in linux, so they get erased upon shutdown.
I think you could improve safety here by booting from a Linux (Ubuntu) USB stick with the generator on it. @phishead, I could walk you through it if you want on IRC. Maybe post is here afterwards? I'm sure others would benefit greatly from such a tutorial if it does not exist! Yeah I'll try to make a guide for it, it's long overdue as well. Thanks I guess the video I made... is too long? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GJQ5prfNfZQ&list=PLSNOd7dPYo3d2NRiybNNZf0xb6TKvh_UJ
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pönde
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February 27, 2016, 11:07:22 AM |
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./simplewallet --generate-from-view-key address:viewkey:filename
That is the way the view-only-wallet is created for simplewallet in linux command line. What is the command to create a full wallet by allready created nmemonic seed?
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smooth
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February 27, 2016, 12:02:00 PM |
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./simplewallet --generate-from-view-key address:viewkey:filename
That is the way the view-only-wallet is created for simplewallet in linux command line. What is the command to create a full wallet by allready created nmemonic seed? ./simplewallet --restore-deterministic-wallet
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dEBRUYNE
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February 27, 2016, 03:33:42 PM |
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Meanwhile, our core-team member Riccardo "fluffypony" Spagni is currently present at the Satoshi Roundtable: http://satoshiroundtable.org/
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Herp
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February 27, 2016, 05:53:56 PM |
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I see volume keeps going lower as I have predicted. Sitting somewhere around 75k now, down from 700-800k fake volume. Expect price to follow on its way down to 4mil market cap.
Get the lube ready boys. It will be a very rough ride.
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ArticMine
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Merit: 1050
Monero Core Team
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February 27, 2016, 06:21:12 PM |
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CrowdWhale
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February 27, 2016, 07:02:44 PM |
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I see volume keeps going lower as I have predicted. Sitting somewhere around 75k now, down from 700-800k fake volume. Expect price to follow on its way down to 4mil market cap.
Get the lube ready boys. It will be a very rough ride.
Too bad you don't know how to interpret volume.
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phishead
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February 27, 2016, 07:37:17 PM |
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"commit to disk" he means never save the seed in a text file, for example.
there are also ways to only save files in ram in linux, so they get erased upon shutdown.
I think you could improve safety here by booting from a Linux (Ubuntu) USB stick with the generator on it. @phishead, I could walk you through it if you want on IRC. Maybe post is here afterwards? I'm sure others would benefit greatly from such a tutorial if it does not exist! Yeah I'll try to make a guide for it, it's long overdue as well. Thanks I guess the video I made... is too long? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GJQ5prfNfZQ&list=PLSNOd7dPYo3d2NRiybNNZf0xb6TKvh_UJNice! I didn't even know that those videos existed! Is there any way we could post a sticky in the monero subreddit that we can direct people who are technologically handicapped (like me) to so new people that come in can look at these videos if they are having trouble setting up things? Or better yet, on the side bar? I think videos that have someone like you show step by step what you are doing to set things up are a lot easier to follow than anything else (for me at least). Looks like I got a busy day ahead of me tomorrow when I get some more free time on my hands to set up everything. If I could make a request, maybe post a video showing how you set up monerodo? I know I'm being super lazy and have been taking up your time for a while now asking you questions about monerodo; but I feel I can speak for the majority of people who don't have a great technical knowledge about computers, nor have the time to sit down and learn everything about computers and the terminology that comes with it. Like for instance, I still don't know much about Linux like why should we use Linux, how to set it up, using command lines, etc... and when I do try to learn about it, I feel like I'm taking courses on Linux in general, when I only want to know the bare minimum to use monero on my computer. Hopefully, I don't sound annoying to you guys... but I think it will eventually help people who aren't "computer people" and just want to use monero as a currency while supporting the network (nodes, mining, etc.). Maybe the community will be willing to chip in some monero to increase the incentive for GingerAle to work on these video tutorials that helps "newbies" like me? I know I'll be willing to throw a little bit in there.
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wpalczynski
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Activity: 1456
Merit: 1000
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February 27, 2016, 07:56:39 PM |
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"commit to disk" he means never save the seed in a text file, for example.
there are also ways to only save files in ram in linux, so they get erased upon shutdown.
I think you could improve safety here by booting from a Linux (Ubuntu) USB stick with the generator on it. @phishead, I could walk you through it if you want on IRC. Maybe post is here afterwards? I'm sure others would benefit greatly from such a tutorial if it does not exist! Yeah I'll try to make a guide for it, it's long overdue as well. Thanks I guess the video I made... is too long? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GJQ5prfNfZQ&list=PLSNOd7dPYo3d2NRiybNNZf0xb6TKvh_UJNice! I didn't even know that those videos existed! Is there any way we could post a sticky in the monero subreddit that we can direct people who are technologically handicapped (like me) to so new people that come in can look at these videos if they are having trouble setting up things? Or better yet, on the side bar? I think videos that have someone like you show step by step what you are doing to set things up are a lot easier to follow than anything else (for me at least). Looks like I got a busy day ahead of me tomorrow when I get some more free time on my hands to set up everything. If I could make a request, maybe post a video showing how you set up monerodo? I know I'm being super lazy and have been taking up your time for a while now asking you questions about monerodo; but I feel I can speak for the majority of people who don't have a great technical knowledge about computers, nor have the time to sit down and learn everything about computers and the terminology that comes with it. Like for instance, I still don't know much about Linux like why should we use Linux, how to set it up, using command lines, etc... and when I do try to learn about it, I feel like I'm taking courses on Linux in general, when I only want to know the bare minimum to use monero on my computer. Hopefully, I don't sound annoying to you guys... but I think it will eventually help people who aren't "computer people" and just want to use monero as a currency while supporting the network (nodes, mining, etc.). Maybe the community will be willing to chip in some monero to increase the incentive for GingerAle to work on these video tutorials that helps "newbies" like me? I know I'll be willing to throw a little bit in there. All very valid questions. I'm sure no one here finds them annoying, quite the contrary I'm pretty sure many people also benefit from the answers.
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explorer
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Activity: 2016
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February 27, 2016, 09:09:30 PM |
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All very valid questions. I'm sure no one here finds them annoying, quite the contrary I'm pretty sure many people also benefit from the answers.
Ditto. It seems there is often enough time to lurk and absorb what others have the time to ask/explain, but never enough free time to dig in on my own. Repetition and sometimes remediation are required to get it right and make it stick. Lurk, learn, accumulate. Keep it up
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e-coinomist
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Money often costs too much.
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February 27, 2016, 09:17:55 PM |
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Your description of the JVM makes you look like a caveman, or at least a philistine. A caveman with a good sense of mass, admittedly, but a caveman nonetheless.
You can. But let's face it - in a language not meant to express things as complex as human thoughts, but rather logic, you don't need or want ridiculous shit - which is why comparing it to English doesn't make sense. The JVM can be fast - I'm not saying Java is *always* slow - usually it's up to the dev - but it's bloated and heavy as hell. It takes you away from the machine and basically puts you in an environment that is far from the machine, which I have a strong distaste for, I will admit. I want to be able to at least use intrinsics to make the compiler emit certain instructions, if I can't inline assembly myself, in cases requiring extreme performance. I feel that Java is a scripting language that wants to pretend it's okay for performance-critical things, or large projects that are sensitive to bloat, but it's not. If I wanted to whip something up quiick to run on any platform, sure - but if I want real control over what's being executed, which is what I write, as a developer, I want to use something that gives me that. Your feelings deceive yourselfe, the java compiler is called javac https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Java_compilerThe only drawbacks on using Java are, my humble opinion: Adds another dependancy. The lesser, the better. Oh, and R.I.P SUN https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun_Microsystems
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dEBRUYNE
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February 27, 2016, 09:22:36 PM |
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@phishead, Linux is often used because it is less prone to malware/keyloggers/rootkits etc. It's because most users use Windows. Therefore it isn't beneficial for malware/keylogger/rootkit makers to create something that "infiltrates" Linux.
Furthermore, I think you ask valid questions and we should discuss on how to set up such a thing as you describe.
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c789
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February 27, 2016, 11:01:41 PM |
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@phishead, Linux is often used because it is less prone to malware/keyloggers/rootkits etc. It's because most users use Windows. Therefore it isn't beneficial for malware/keylogger/rootkit makers to create something that "infiltrates" Linux.
Furthermore, I think you ask valid questions and we should discuss on how to set up such a thing as you describe.
Also, Linux is open source. That means people can review the source code of the operating system (Ubuntu, Fedora, etc.) and tweak it at the source code level, if they so desire. This also means that you can verify that no backdoors have been built into your OS. With Windows or Mac, you have to trust Microsoft and Apple to not put in backdoors.
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GingerAle
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Activity: 1260
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February 27, 2016, 11:19:33 PM |
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so little free time these days. well, I've discovered its easy to have free time, its more difficult to have free project time. I.e., 3 hour chunks. I've found with 1 hour I can't do squat.
Right now I'm trying for the life of me to get the goddamned UUI to work again. somehow or another unetbootin just borked my USB drive, so now that damn thing either won't boot, and when it did, it went straight to the live OS (with no installer menu / process).
I know, I know, not monero's problems. But yeah.
When I get the monerodo OS happy again, i'll make videos. As it stands now, the existing iso files should only be used by those who can hack some of the config files.
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americanpegasus
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February 28, 2016, 01:19:49 AM |
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so little free time these days. well, I've discovered its easy to have free time, its more difficult to have free project time. I.e., 3 hour chunks. I've found with 1 hour I can't do squat.
Right now I'm trying for the life of me to get the goddamned UUI to work again. somehow or another unetbootin just borked my USB drive, so now that damn thing either won't boot, and when it did, it went straight to the live OS (with no installer menu / process).
I know, I know, not monero's problems. But yeah.
When I get the monerodo OS happy again, i'll make videos. As it stands now, the existing iso files should only be used by those who can hack some of the config files.
I have fantasies of an easy-to-use XMR node/miner box sold and shipped using your Monerodo OS, with profit from sales going back into dev funds, and a little for everyone involved.
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Account is back under control of the real AmericanPegasus.
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